Career Opportunities

We believe in honesty, propriety, delivery on promises, and professionalism. Our imperative is to leave no phone call unanswered, and no lead cold.

We encourage personal growth through the support and mentorship of our experienced staff and expert management team. In fact, we have built and developed our business practices around the agent. We observe, define, react and grow through the eyes of our agents. In turn, our team takes pride in their hard work and providing superior customer service.

We will give you the tools - and guide you!

We will take away the mundane—the endless hours of administrative work, the advertising, the ups-and-downs of a negotiation, the jitters of a closing process. We will empower you to achieve your goals and surpass those goals as a confident, seasoned real estate profession-al.

We will not put you through a three-day training, and leave you out there to fend for yourself and make up answers to the questions as you go. You will learn the business of real estate and how to cultivate and service clients through an effective, engaging, hands-on approach.

We will not make extraordinary promises. We do promise that your drive and commitment will take you where you wish to go. We will give you a constant supply of guidance and quality listings to help you succeed consistently... despite the fact that many claim that real estate brokerage business is a seasonal one.

Prepare yourself for endless possibilities and exceptional results from week one! Ideal Properties Group LLC will ensure that you succeed. We are passionate and care about the integrity and quality of our work. Your success is our success, and anything less than that is simply unacceptable.

If you value teamwork and expect recognition, professional growth and full attainment of your goals—give us a call. We may be just the right fit.

Sign Up for Job Alerts

Get the latest jobs to your inbox daily. We do the searching for you! We will never spam you, and you can subscribe any time.

A little over 8 million people live in New York City. That means 1 in every 38 people in the United States calls NYC - home.

NYC garbage collectors call maggots "disco rice."

On 9/11, when all transport out of the city was shut down, citizen boat owners managed to transport over 500k people from Manhattan Island in an amazing act of selflessness and camaraderie known as the “9/11 Boatlift.”

The New York Public Library has over 50 million books and other items and is the second largest library system in the nation after the Library of Congress. It is also the third largest library in the world.

The first bank card, named “Charg-It,” was introduced in 1946 in Brooklyn by banker John Biggins.

There are "fake" buildings in the city that are used for subway maintenance and ventilation. E.g. 3-story historic townhouse at 58 Joralemon Street in Brooklyn Heights

Charles Feltman is said to have invented the hot dog at Coney Island in 1867. The famous Nathan’s was later opened by one of his former employees.

Sam Schapiro began the Kosher wine industry on New York's Lower East side with their famous extra heavy original concord wine in 1899

There is a birth in New York City every 4.4 minutes.

In 2010, 38% of all 911 calls in NYC were butt dials.

There is a secret train platform in the Waldorf Astoria hotel.

New York City's 520-mile coastline is longer than those of Miami, Boston, Los Angeles, and San Francisco combined.

More than 800 languages are spoken in New York City, making it the most linguistically diverse city in the world. Four in 10 NYC households speak a language other than English.

The Empire State building has its own zip code.

The Macy’s Thanksgiving Day Parade originally featured live animals from the Central Park Zoo, but they occasionally roared and scared children, so they were replaced with balloons.

The price of a slice of pizza and the cost of a single ride on the subway has been nearly equal for the past 50 years.

The United Nations headquarters was established in New York City in 1952 after World War II.

At one time, Brooklyn was its own separate city. It merged with the City of New York in what some Brooklyn residents call “the Great Mistake of 1898.”

Pinball was banned in New York City until 1978. In the past, the NYPD even used to organize "Prohibition-style” busts to enforce the ban!

New York City has 722 miles of subway tracks.

It can cost over $289,000 for a one-year hot dog stand permit in Central Park.

In NYC, there was one homicide on 9/11, and it remains unsolved.

There is a death in New York City every 9.1 minutes.

Chernobyl is closer to New York than Fukushima is to L.A.

Eating a New York bagel is equivalent to eating one-quarter to one-half a loaf of bread.

More Chinese people live in New York City than in any other city outside of Asia. More Jewish people live here than in any other city outside of Israel.

Up until 1957, a pneumatic mail tube system used to connect 23 post offices across 27 miles in NYC. At one point, the system moved 97,000 letters a day.

Joseph C. Gayetty of New York City invented toilet paper in 1857.

France gifted the Statue of Liberty to the United States in 1886 for its Centennial celebration. The statue was shipped as 350 pieces in 214 crates and took 4 months to assemble at its current home on Ellis Island.

The first public brewery in America was established by Peter Minuit at the Market (Marckvelt) field in lower Manhattan.

New York City’s Federal Reserve Bank has the largest storage of gold in the world. The Fed's vault is 80 feet below street level and contains $90 billion in gold.

The borough of Brooklyn would be the fourth largest city in the United States, if it weren't part of NYC.

Central Park, which opened to the public in 1858, became the first landscaped public park in an American city.

The winter of 1780 was so harsh in New York that New York harbor froze over. People could walk from Manhattan to Staten Island on the ice.

Credit card minimums ARE legal in NYC. In 2010, Congress legalized up to a $10 minimum.

The first daily Yiddish newspaper appeared in 1885 in New York City.

New York City has more people than 39 of the 50 states in the U.S.

Times Square is named after the New York Times. It was originally called Longacre Square until The Times moved there in 1904.

In 1975, the City of New York sold a private island in the East River for $10.

Twizzlers candy was developed by the National Licorice Company in Brooklyn in 1845.

On November 28, 2012, not a single murder, shooting, stabbing, or other incident of violent crime was reported in NYC for an entire day. The first time… in… basically… ever.

In nine years, Madison Square Garden's lease will run out and the celebrated venue will have to move.

The "New York Post" established in 1803 by Alexander Hamilton is the oldest running newspaper in the United States.

It would cost about $17,000 to take a cab from NYC to L.A.

Since Brooklyn’s terrain is mostly flat, it’s the fastest borough for runners in the New York City Marathon with an average speed of 8:14 minutes per mile.

America’s first rollercoaster debuted on June 16, 1884 on Coney Island in Brooklyn. Known as the Switchback Railway, it only traveled six miles per hour.

European settlers who brought seeds to New York introduced apples to the US in the 1600s.

Gennaro Lombardi opened the first United States pizzeria in 1895 in New York City.

The narrowest house in NYC is in the West Village: 75 1/2 Bedford Street is just over 9 feet wide.

Sixty percent of cigarettes sold in NYC are illegally smuggled from other states.

There's a wind tunnel near the Flat Iron building that can raise women's skirts. In the not-so-distant past, men used to gather outside of the building to feast their eyes on the effect.

New York City's subway system is the largest mass transit system in the world (and it keeps expanding).

The first capital of the United States was New York City. In 1789 George Washington took his oath as President on the balcony at Federal Hall.

740 Park in Manhattan is currently home to the highest concentration of billionaires in the country.

In 1920, a horse-drawn carriage filled with explosives was detonated on Wall Street killing 30 people. No one was ever caught, but the event is considered to be one of the first ever acts of domestic terrorism.

There are tiny shrimp called copepods in NYC's drinking water.

The East River is not a river, it's a tidal estuary.

The first American chess tournament was held in New York in 1843.

It is a misdemeanor to pass gas in NYC churches.

UPS, FedEx, and other commercial delivery companies receive up to 7,000 parking tickets a DAY, contributing up to $120 million in revenue for the City of New York.

Albert Einstein's eyeballs are stored in a safe deposit box in New York City.

The entire world's population could fit in the state of Texas if it were as densely populated as New York City.

NYC buries its unclaimed bodies on an island off the coast of the Bronx called Hart Island. Since 1869, nearly a million bodies have been buried there. The island is not open to the public.

In 1922, there was a Straw Hat Riot. It was an unofficial rule in NYC that straw hats weren't allowed to be worn past Sept. 15, but some unruly kids started snatching people's hats a few days before that, causing an uprising that lasted a few days.

The original Penn Station was considered to be one of the most beautiful train stations in the world but was torn down because of declining rail usage.

All square footage measurements are approximate and should be independently verified and confirmed. No guarantee, warranty or representation of any kind is made regarding the completeness or accuracy of such measurements and Ideal Properties Group LLC expressly disclaims any liability in connection with such measurements.